The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage

Sydney Padua

Image | BOOK COVER: The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage by Sydney Padua

Meet Victorian London's most dynamic duo: Charles Babbage, the unrealized inventor of the computer, and his accomplice, Ada, Countess of Lovelace, the peculiar protoprogrammer and daughter of Lord Byron. When Lovelace translated a description of Babbage's plans for an enormous mechanical calculating machine in 1842, she added annotations three times longer than the original work. Her footnotes contained the first appearance of the general computing theory, a hundred years before an actual computer was built. Sadly, Lovelace died of cancer a decade after publishing the paper, and Babbage never built any of his machines.
The Thrilling Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage presents a rollicking alternate reality in which Lovelace and Babbage do build the Difference Engine and then use it to build runaway economic models, battle the scourge of spelling errors, explore the wilder realms of mathematics, and, of course, fight crime — for the sake of both London and science. (From Knopf Publishing)

Author interviews

Embed | YouTube

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.